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Tag: Parkinson’s Disease

  • The Link Between Milk and Parkinson’s Disease | NutritionFacts.org

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    Is the brain damage associated with milk consumption due to the banned pesticide heptachlor or the milk sugar galactose?

    Parkinson’s disease is a neurodegenerative brain disorder that affects millions of people. What causes it? Well, if you look at lifestyle factors associated with Parkinson’s disease, dairy consumption is the strongest dietary factor associated with an increased risk of Parkinson’s disease. In fact, dairy products are the only food group consistently linked with a high risk of developing Parkinson’s. Five large prospective studies have confirmed the link. This includes the two Harvard cohorts, the Nurses’ Health Study and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study, which followed more than 100,000 people combined for decades in “the largest analysis of dairy and PD [Parkinson’s disease] to date,” analyzing more than 1,000 newly diagnosed cases. All the studies found a link between dairy and Parkinson’s, with most finding a significant link—about a 50% increase in risk overall in those drinking the most milk compared to those drinking the least, at a p-value below 0.00001, meaning there’s less than a 1 in 100,000 chance you’d randomly get a finding that extreme. You can see this in the chart below and at 1:13 in my video, The Role Milk May Play in Triggering Parkinson’s Disease.

    Okay, but why is there a link at all? “Despite clear-cut associations between milk intake and” incidence of Parkinson’s, “there is no rational explanation,” concluded one review. A year later, though, we got a clue: “Midlife milk consumption and substantia nigra neuron density at death.” What does that mean? Parkinson’s is caused primarily by the loss of a certain type of nerve cells in a critical part of the brain, with symptoms first appearing once most of these neurons have died. So one study looked at how much milk people drank when they were in their 40s, 50s, and 60s, and then examined their brains at autopsy and counted how many of those critical neurons they had left. In every single quadrant, neuron density was highest “in those who consumed no milk and lowest in those who consumed the most milk.” Even after removing the Parkinson’s cases, those drinking two cups (473 mL) of milk a day had up to 40% fewer nerve cells in most quadrants of that critical brain region. What’s in milk that could be wiping out brain cells? Among the people who drank the most milk, residues of the pesticide “heptachlor epoxide were found in 9 out of 10 brains.” So, maybe the finding of pesticide residues more commonly in the brains of those who drank the most milk could explain how milk could be cause-and-effect related to Parkinson’s disease risk.

    Now, that’s not the only potential explanation. In one of my videos, I talked about how meat contains that clumpy neurotoxic protein alpha-synuclein. Well, dairy products may contain trace amounts as well, but we don’t have confirmation of that. Could the milk sugar “galactose be the missing link?” Galactose is what the lactose in milk breaks down into once it’s in the body. It’s also what’s used to induce aging—to experimentally cause aging—in the brain. When you drink it, the galactose is picked up by your brain within a few hours, and for doses above 100 mg/kg, it appears that galactose can cause pathological alterations in brain cells, similar to those observed in Parkinson’s disease. This amount “can be reached and surpassed” by simply drinking two glasses (473 mL) of milk (the main dietary source of galactose) each day. And of all your brain cells, those dopaminergic neurons—the ones that you need to retain to prevent Parkinson’s—may be more vulnerable to galactose-induced damage because they are more vulnerable to oxidative stress.

    Galactose may also explain the findings linking milk drinking with higher death rates. You may be thinking, “Well, duh—the saturated butterfat is just cutting people’s lives short,” but higher mortality with high milk consumption has been observed regardless of the milk fat content. Skim milk might be fat-free, but it’s not lactose-free.

    Can’t you just drink lactose-free milk, like Lactaid? That has the lactase enzyme added to make lactose-free milk. But it just breaks down lactose into galactose in the carton rather than in your gut, so you’re still ingesting the same amount of galactose. Perhaps it’s no wonder that more milk intake at midlife may be linked to a greater rate of cognitive decline. Remember, researchers use galactose to create brain aging in the laboratory. D-galactose, a metabolic derivative of lactose, has been extensively used in animal models “to mimic cognitive aging” through oxidative stress. Compared to those who said they “almost never” drink milk, those drinking more than one glass (237 mL) a day appear more likely to suffer a decline in global cognitive function.

    Doctor’s Note

    Here’s the meat video I mentioned: The Role Meat May Play in Triggering Parkinson’s Disease.

    You may remember that I’ve explored this before in Could Lactose Explain the Milk and Parkinson’s Disease Link?. Uric acid may also be a contender—see Parkinson’s Disease and the Uric Acid Sweet Spot.

    For more on Parkinson’s disease, check out related posts below.

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    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • Treating sleep apnea early may help prevent Parkinson’s disease, study finds

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    Catching and treating a common sleep disorder early may help prevent Parkinson’s disease, a new study shows.

    Parkinson’s is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder that causes tremor, stiffness, slow movement, as well as sleep and mental health issues. About 1.1 million people in the United States have Parkinson’s with the number expected to rise to 1.2 million by 2030, according to the Parkinson’s Foundation.


    MORE: The brain has 5 stages, but ‘adulthood’ doesn’t begin until age 32, scientists say


    Obstructive sleep apnea, a sleep disorder affecting approximately 30 million people in the United States, occurs when throat muscles relax, causing people to temporarily stop breathing and briefly wake up as many as five times an hour throughout the night.

    A study published Monday in JAMA Neurology describes a link between untreated sleep apnea and Parkinson’s that may help identify those with the highest risk for the neurological disease, which has no cure.

    Using health data collected between 1999 and 2022 from more than 11 million U.S. veterans, researchers found that about 14% of them were diagnosed with sleep apnea. Six years after being diagnosed, the veterans with untreated sleep apnea were almost twice as likely to have Parkinson’s than those who got treatment, according to the study.

    Having sleep apnea is “…not at all a guarantee that you’re going to get Parkinson’s, but it significantly increases the chances,” the study’s co-author, Dr. Gregory Scott, said.

    Conversely, treating sleep apnea with a continuous positive airway pressure – or CPAP – machine seems reduce the risk of developing Parkinson’s, researchers found. A CPAP machine blows air through a tube into a mask that fits over the face to keep airways open during sleep.

    “If you stop breathing and oxygen is not at a normal level, your neurons are probably not functioning at a normal level either,” the study’s lead author, Dr. Lee Neilson, said. “Add that up night after night, year after year, and it may explain why fixing the problem by using CPAP may build in some resilience against neurodegenerative conditions, including Parkinson’s.”

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    Courtenay Harris Bond

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  • Civil Rights Leader Jesse Jackson Leaves Hospital After Treatment for Neurological Disorder

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    SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — The Rev. Jesse Jackson has been released from a Chicago hospital where he was treated for a rare neurological disorder, his son said Tuesday.

    The 84-year-old civil rights leader was discharged Monday from Northwestern Memorial Hospital, his son and family spokesperson Yusef Jackson said.

    In 2013, Jackson, who now receives round-the-clock care at home, was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. The diagnosis was changed last April to progressive supranuclear palsy, or PSP, a neurodegenerative disorder which can have similar symptoms to Parkinson’s.

    Yusef Jackson thanked “the countless friends and supporters who have reached out, visited and prayed for our father,” as well as the medical and security staff at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

    “We humbly ask for your continued prayers throughout this precious time,” Yusef Jackson said.

    A protégé of the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., the two-time presidential candidate and internationally known founder of the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition was hospitalized Nov. 14.

    Visitors included former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, fellow civil rights leader the Rev. Al Sharpton and television court arbitrator Judge Greg Mathis.

    After announcing his Parkinson’s diagnosis in 2017, Jackson continued to work and make public appearances, including at the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. In 2023, he stepped down as leader of Rainbow/PUSH, which he began as Operation PUSH in 1971, but continued going to the office regularly until a few months ago.

    His family says that Jackson uses a wheelchair, struggles to keep his eyes open and is unable to speak. Relatives, including his sons, Illinois U.S. Rep. Jonathan Jackson and Jesse Jackson Jr., a former Illinois congressman seeking reelection, have been caring for him in shifts.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

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    Associated Press

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  • Chicago Civil Rights Leader Jesse Jackson Hospitalized for Rare Neurological Disorder

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    CHICAGO (AP) — The Rev. Jesse Jackson, who has been receiving around-the-clock care at home, has been hospitalized with a rare neurological disorder, according to his Chicago-based organization.

    The civil rights leader was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease over a decade ago. But his Rainbow/PUSH organization said late Wednesday that the 84-year-old was under observation for progressive supranuclear palsy, or PSP, a neurodegenerative disorder he has been “managing for more than a decade” and received a diagnosis for in April.

    “The family appreciates all prayers at this time,” the statement said.

    It is not clear if Jackson has both Parkinson’s and PSP, which have similar symptoms, or solely the PSP that was confirmed this year. A Rainbow/PUSH spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for clarity on Thursday.

    The elder Jackson has been using a wheelchair and continued going into the office regularly until months ago, family members said.

    In recent months, his relatives, including sons U.S. Rep. Jonathan Jackson and Jesse Jackson Jr., a former Illinois congressman seeking reelection, have been providing 24-hour care in shifts.

    The reverend has struggled to keep his eyes open and is unable to speak. But he has found ways to communicate with family and friends who visit, his son Jesse Jackson Jr. told The Associated Press last month.

    “He’ll squeeze your hand,” he said.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

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    Associated Press

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  • Might Meat Trigger Parkinson’s Disease?  | NutritionFacts.org

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    What does the gut have to do with developing Parkinson’s disease?

    Parkinson’s disease is an ever-worsening neurodegenerative disorder that results in death and affects about 1 in 50 people as they get older. A small minority of cases are genetic, running in families, but 85% to 90% of cases are sporadic, meaning they seem to pop up out of nowhere. Parkinson’s is caused by the death of a certain kind of nerve cell in the brain. Once about 70% of them are gone, the symptoms start. What kills off those cells? It still isn’t completely clear, but the abnormal clumping of a protein called alpha-synuclein or α-synuclein is thought to be involved. Why? Researchers injected blended Parkinson’s brains into the heads of rats and monkeys, and Parkinson’s pathology and symptoms were induced. It can even happen when injecting just the pure, clumped α-synuclein strands themselves. How, though, do these clumps naturally end up in the brain?

    As I discuss in my video The Role Meat May Play in Triggering Parkinson’s Disease, it all seems to start in the gut. The part of the brain where the pathology often first appears is directly connected to the gut, and we have direct evidence of the spread of Parkinson’s pathology from the gastrointestinal (GI) tract to the brain: α-synuclein from brains of Parkinson’s patients is taken up in the gut wall and creeps up the vagal nerves from the gut into the brain—at least that was the case in rats. If only we could go back and look at people’s colons before they got Parkinson’s. Indeed, we can. Old colon biopsies from people who would later develop Parkinson’s were dredged up, and, years before symptoms arose, you could see the α-synuclein in their gut.

    Research supported by the Michael J. Fox Foundation has found that you can reliably distinguish the colons of patients from controls by the presence of this Parkinson’s protein lodged in the gut wall. But how did it get there in the first place? Are “vertebrate food products…a potential source of prion-like α-synuclein”? Indeed, nearly all the animals with backbones that we consume—cows, chickens, pigs, and fish—express the protein α-synuclein. So, when we eat common meat products, when we eat skeletal muscle, we’re eating nerves, blood cells, and the muscle cells themselves. Every pound of meat contains, on average, half a teaspoon of blood, and that alone could be an α-synuclein source to potentially trigger a clumping cascade of our own α-synuclein in the gut. Though “it may seem intuitive that dietary α-synuclein could seed aggregation in the gut,” this kind of buildup, what evidence do we have that it’s actually happening?

    We have some pretty interesting data. There’s a surgical procedure called a vagotomy, in which the big nerve that goes from our gut to our brain—the vagus nerve—is cut as an old-timey treatment for stomach ulcers. Would cutting communication between the gut and the brain reduce Parkinson’s risk? Apparently so, suggesting that the gut to brain’s vagal nerve may be critically involved in the development of Parkinson’s disease.

    Of course, “many people regularly consume meat and dairy products, but only a small fraction of the general population will develop PD,” Parkinson’s disease. So, there must be other factors at play that “may provide an opportunity for unwanted dietary α-synuclein to enter the host, and initiate disease.” For example, our gut becomes leakier as we age, so might that play a role? What else makes our gut leaky? “Dietary fiber deprivation has also been shown to degrade the intestinal barrier and enhance pathogen entry.” So, this raises “possibilities for food-based therapies.”

    Parkinson’s patients have significantly less Prevotella in their gut, a friendly fiber-eating flora that bolsters our intestinal barrier function. So, low levels of Prevotella are linked to a leaky gut, which has been linked to intestinal α-synuclein deposition, but fiber-rich foods may bring Prevotella levels back up. “Therefore, it is possible that by adopting a plant-based diet, in addition to the beneficial effects of phytonutrients, increasing overall fiber intake may modify gut microbiota and gut permeability [leakiness] in beneficial ways for people with PD.”

    So, does a vegan diet—one with lots of fiber and no meat—reduce risk for Parkinson’s? Parkinson’s “appears to be rare in quasi-vegan cultures,” with rates that are about five times lower in rural sub-Saharan Africa, for instance. All this time, we were thinking the benefits seen for Parkinson’s from plant-based diets were due to the antioxidants and anti-inflammatory nature of the animal-free diets, but maybe it’s also due to the increased intestinal exposure to fiber and decreased intestinal exposure to ingested nerves, muscles, and blood.

    Wasn’t that fascinating? For more on Parkinson’s, see the related posts below.

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    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • Sue Goldie Has Parkinson’s Disease

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    She is animated now, in full lecture mode. Patients, she says, should have access to therapists and trainers as soon as they’re diagnosed with Parkinson’s, not just after a fall or injury or when symptoms become debilitating. Insurance companies should pay for it, she says. Studies show that exercise is good for patients — for Parkinson’s symptoms, yes, and maybe for the progress of the disease itself, but also to help stave off problems and comorbidities that come when people stop moving much, like heart disease and diabetes.

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    John Branch and Sophie Park

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  • Darrell Christian, former AP managing editor and sports editor, dies at 75

    Darrell Christian, former AP managing editor and sports editor, dies at 75

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    Darrell L. Christian, a former managing editor and sports editor of The Associated Press known for a demanding demeanor and insistence on excellence during more than four decades with the news agency, died Monday. He was 75.

    Christian died of Parkinson’s disease at Elegant Senior Living in Encino, California, according to his wife, Lissa Morrow Christian. He had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease around 2015, his wife said.

    “Darrell was the finest story editor I ever saw, with an unerring instinct for the lead and shape of copy and zero tolerance for anything but the best,” said Mike Silverman, the AP’s managing editor from 2000 to 2007 and senior managing editor through 2009. ”I had the great good fortune to be his deputy for several years when he was managing editor and much of what I later brought to the job I owed to him.”

    A no-nonsense editor known for directness and rigor, Christian modernized AP’s sports coverage during seven years in charge, emphasizing breaking news and in-depth reporting on issues as the sports business, academics and high school safety standards. That coverage earned him a promotion to managing editor under William E. Ahearn, then the executive editor.

    “Sports is just an extension of hard news with a slightly different flavor,” Christian told the National Press Club in 2007.

    Born on Dec. 26, 1948, Christian was a native of Henderson, Kentucky. He began his newspaper career as a sports writer and sports editor at the Henderson Gleaner in 1964, worked two summers in the AP’s bureau at Charleston, West Virginia, and received a bachelor’s degree from the University of Kentucky in 1969. After serving in the Navy from 1969-1972, Christian joined the AP in Indianapolis in 1972. He became news editor in 1975, moved to the Washington bureau in 1980 and became deputy sports editor in New York the following year.

    Christian was promoted to sports editor in 1985, coordinating coverage of the 1988 and 1992 Winter and Summer Olympics and overseeing the addition of featurized approaches to game stories on all major sports events — something he brought to news stories as managing editor.

    “When Jackie Robinson came along, sports began to develop a social consciousness,” Christian said at the National Press Club. “It really exploded in the 1970 and early ’80s with television coverage, which brought sports events into the living room and the proliferation of money in sports, the free agency where you suddenly created a whole generation of instant millionaires. And what happened between the lines was no longer enough. That created a public appetite for everything you could possibly want to know about these athletes.”

    Called “DLC” throughout the AP, Christian was known for his sharp, concise critiques sent to reporters, left in mailboxes in blue envelopes in the pre-digital era. The “blue notes” were feared among the staff.

    Christian said the top story he covered as sports editor was Ben Johnson testing positive for a banned steroid at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, South Korea, which caused him to work for 48 consecutive hours. Among the major stories he oversaw as managing editor: the O.J. Simpson saga, whose coverage he led with aplomb.

    “It was indeed the circus of the century and it was one wild ride to cover it on a day-in, day-out basis,” Christian said.

    Christian replaced Martin C. Thompson as managing editor in 1992 and chaired the Pulitzer Prize investigative jury in 1995 and 1996.

    “Darrell was an old-school competitive newsman who valued creative stories delivered quickly to readers,” said Kathleen Carroll, the AP’s executive editor from 2002 to 2016. Those values infused every decision he made leading state, national and sports coverage: Make it interesting, write cleanly and get it out the door. His crusty exterior and droll sense of humor barely disguised his deep devotion to fast, accurate, interesting stories and the people who wrote them.”

    After six years as managing editor, Christian was succeeded by Jonathan P. Wolman and became director of MegaSports, the AP’s multimedia sports service for newspaper and broadcast members and commercial online services and websites.

    “Darrell combined old-school editing skill with a hunger to stay on top of the latest and innovation that would help keep AP competitive at the very beginning of the internet news age,” said Michael Giarrusso, AP’s deputy for newsgathering-global beats, who worked under Christian. “He was as comfortable editing the lead on a story as he was meeting with tech startups that wanted access to AP news or photos.”

    Christian became business editor in 2000, and in 2003 was appointed to the newly created position of director of sports data, combining AP Digital’s MegaSports service with the AP’s newspaper sports agate service.

    “Behind the gruff old-school newsman exterior was an editor who proved to be a mentor for the next generation of journalists,” said Brian Orefice, a manager of the data division and now vice president of product at Stats Perform, the renamed digital company. “His professional credentials were unquestioned and his advice invaluable.”

    Christian became editor at large in 2006, then created the AP’s Top Stories Desk in 2008 and managed it until his retirement in 2014, when he moved to California.

    “Darrell never really stopped doing what he loved, which was to edit and illustrate,” AP golf writer Doug Ferguson said. “He put an emphasis on letting details do the work of adjectives. And he had this terrific ability of knowing what the story was and how to get there. He made us better.”

    Christian had been living at home in Encino and still going to a gym and playing golf and softball before he entered Encino Hospital Medical Center on May 24. He was transferred to a rehabilitation facility a few weeks later and moved to the senior living facility on June 25.

    Christian’s first marriage ended in divorce. He met Lissa Morrow when he was supervising AP’s coverage at the 1984 Super Bowl in Tampa, Florida, where she was covering for a radio station. In addition to his wife, he is survived by a brother, Scott, and niece Erika Whitman.

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  • What Should We Drink?  | NutritionFacts.org

    What Should We Drink?  | NutritionFacts.org

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    Here is a review of reviews on the health effects of tea, coffee, milk, wine, and soda.

    If you’ve watched my videos or read my books, you’ve heard me say, time and again, the best available balance of evidence. What does that mean? When making decisions as life-or-death important as what to feed ourselves and our families, it matters less what a single study says, but rather what the totality of peer-reviewed science has to say.

    Individual studies can lead to headlines like “Study Finds No Link Between Secondhand Smoke and Cancer,” but to know if there is a link between secondhand smoke and lung cancer, it would be better to look at a review or meta-analysis that compiles multiple studies. The problem is that some reviews say one thing—for instance, “breathing other people’s tobacco smoke is a cause of lung cancer”—and other reviews say another—such as, the effects of secondhand smoke are insignificant and further such talk may “foster irrational fears.” And, while we’re at it, you can indulge in “active smoking of some 4-5 cigarettes per day” without really worrying about it, so light up!

    Why do review articles on the health effects of secondhand smoke reach such different conclusions? As you can imagine, about 90 percent of reviews written by researchers affiliated with the tobacco industry said it was not harmful, whereas you get the opposite number with independent reviews, as you can see below and at 1:18 in my video Friday Favorites: What Are the Best Beverages?. Reviews written by the tobacco industry–affiliated researchers had 88 times the odds of concluding that secondhand smoke was harmless. It was all part of “a deliberate strategy to use scientific consultants to discredit the science…” In other words, “the strategic and long run antidote to the passive smoking issue…is developing and widely publicizing clear-cut, credible, medical evidence that passive smoking [secondhand smoke] is not harmful to the non-smoker’s health.”

    Can’t we just stick to the independent reviews? The problem is that industry-funded researchers have all sorts of sneaky ways to get out of declaring conflicts of interest, so it can be hard to follow the money. For instance, it was found that “77% failed to disclose the sources of funding” for their research. But, even without knowing who funded what, the majority of reviews still concluded that secondhand smoke was harmful. So, just as a single study may not be as helpful as looking at a compilation of studies on a topic, a single review may not be as useful as a compilation of reviews. In that case, looking at a review of reviews can give us a better sense of where the best available balance of evidence may lie. When it comes to secondhand smoke, it’s probably best not to inhale, as you can see in the graph below and at 2:30 in my video

    Wouldn’t it be cool if there were reviews of reviews for different foods and drinks? Voila! Enter “Associations Between Food and Beverage Groups and Major Diet-Related Chronic Diseases: An Exhaustive Review of Pooled/Meta-Analyses and Systematic Reviews.” Let’s start with the drinks. As you can see below and at 2:51 in my video, the findings were classified into three categories: protective, neutral, or deleterious.

    First up: tea versus coffee. As you can see in the graph below and at 2:58, most reviews found both beverages to be protective for whichever condition they were studying, but you can see how this supports my recommendation for tea over coffee. Every cup of coffee is a lost opportunity to drink a cup of green tea, which is even healthier. 

    It’s no surprise that soda sinks to the bottom, as you can see below and at 3:20 in my video, but 14 percent of reviews mentioned the protective effects of drinking soda. What?! Well, most were references to papers like “High Intake of Added Sugar Among Norwegian Children and Adolescents,” a cross-sectional study that found that eighth-grade girls who drank more soda were thinner than girls who drank less. Okay, but that was just a snapshot in time. What do you think is more likely? That the heavier girls were heavier because they drank less soda, or that they drank less sugary soda because they were heavier? Soda abstention may therefore be a consequence of obesity, rather than a cause, yet it gets marked down as having a protective association. 

    Study design flaws may also account for wine numbers, as seen below and at 4:07 in my video. This review of reviews was published in 2014, before the revolution in our understanding of “alcohol’s evaporating health benefits,” suggesting that the “presumed health benefits from ‘moderate’ alcohol use [may have] finally collapsed”—thanks in part to a systematic error of misclassifying former drinkers as if they were lifelong abstainers, as I revealed in a deep dive in a video series on the subject.  

    Sometimes there are unexplainable associations. For example, one of the soft drink studies found that increased soda consumption was associated with a lower risk of certain types of esophageal cancers. Don’t tell me. Was the study funded by Coca-Cola? Indeed. Does that help explain the positive milk studies, as you can see in the graph below and at 5:02 in my video? Were they all just funded by the National Dairy Council? 

    As shown below and at 5:06, even more conflicts of interest have been found among milk studies than soda studies, with industry-funded studies of all such beverages “approximately four to eight times more likely to be favorable to the financial interests of the [study] sponsors than articles without industry-related funding.”

    Funding bias aside, though, there could be legitimate reasons for the protective effects associated with milk consumption. After all, those who drink more milk may drink less soda, which is even worse, so they may come out ahead. It may be more than just relative benefits, though. The soda-cancer link seems a little tenuous and not just because of the study’s financial connection to The Coca-Cola Company. It’s hard to imagine a biologically plausible mechanism, whereas even something as universally condemned as tobacco isn’t universally bad. As I’ve explored before, more than 50 studies have consistently found a protective association between nicotine and Parkinson’s disease. Even secondhand smoke may be protective. Of course, you’d still want to avoid it. Passive secondhand smoke may decrease the risk of Parkinson’s, but it increases the risk of stroke, an even deadlier brain disease, not to mention lung cancer and heart disease, which has killed off millions of Americans since the first Surgeon General’s report was released, as you can see below and at 6:20 in my video

    Thankfully, by eating certain vegetables, we may be able to get some of the benefits without the risks, and the same may be true of dairy. As I’ve described before, the consumption of milk is associated with an increased risk of prostate cancer, leading to recommendations suggesting that men may want to cut down or minimize their intake, but milk consumption is also associated with decreased colorectal cancer risk. This appears to be a calcium effect. Thankfully, we may be able to get the best of both worlds by eating high-calcium plant foods, such as greens and beans.  

    What does our review-of-reviews study conclude about such plant-based foods, in comparison to animal-based foods? We’ll find out next.

    Stay tuned for the exhaustive review of meta-analyses and systematic reviews on major diet-related chronic diseases found for food groups in What Are the Best Foods?.

    The alcohol video I mentioned is Is It Better to Drink a Little Alcohol Than None at All?, and the Parkinson’s video is Pepper’s and Parkinson’s: The Benefits of Smoking Without the Risks. I also mentioned my Dairy and Cancer video. 

    What about diet soda? See related posts below. 

    What’s so bad about alcohol? Check out Can Alcohol Cause Cancer? and Do Any Benefits of Alcohol Outweigh the Risks? for more. 

    I’ve also got tons of milk. Check here.

    My recommendations for the best beverages are water, green tea, and hibiscus herbal tea. Learn more in the related posts below.

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    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • Parkinson’s Disease and Medical Marijuana

    Parkinson’s Disease and Medical Marijuana

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    Michael J Fox brought attention to Parkinson’s at his recent appearance at the BAFTA awards.  But what about Parkinson’s Disease and Medical Marijuana

    Parkinson’s disease is one of the worst things to happen to a person. Ultimately, an active mind will be trapped in a non-functioning body. Along with the physical symptoms of Parkinson’s, many people with the diagnosis also experience psychosis, which begins with mild symptoms. This mental side of Parkinson’s can start with confusion and progress to include hallucinations and dementia. Michael J. Fox, the actor, is one of the most famous faces of the disease. The actor received a standing ovation during a surprise appearance at the British Academy Film Awards (BAFTA) Sunday. But what about Parkinson’s disease and medical marijuana.

    RELATED: Science Says Medical Marijuana Improves Quality Of Life

    Long an advocate for more research and discovering treatments to help patients, Fox has been a leader in the field.  His Foundation has shared research to date lacks the data to prove benefits or safety. Thus, doctors don’t have strong evidence to guide recommendations on what to use or how to truly help patients. Still, many people are interested in trying this therapy. In 2020, The Michael J. Fox Foundation convened a workshop on medical marijuana with field leaders and other Parkinson’s organizations.

    The limited amount of true research completed has had mixed or conflicting results (some positive, some negative). On questionnaires, people often report benefit on pain, sleep, mood, or motor symptoms such as tremor or stiffness. But many also report side effects. This leaves patients, doctors and researchers with insufficient evidence to guide use.

    Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) is the principal psychoactive constituent of cannabis. In limited studies, THC has shown to improve both activity and hand-eye coordination in an animal model. A clinical study of 22 patients with the Parkenson’s and smoking marijuana, resulted in improvement of motor symptoms such as bradykinesia, resting tremor, rigidity, and posture, along with with non-motor symptoms such as sleep and pain.

    RELATED: 5 Morning Activities To Help You Feel Happier

    Cannabis has been used for hundreds of years for pain relief, improving sleep and for other purposes, there is still very little evidence regarding its efficacy and safety. Parkinson’s Europe is more positive toward research and information. They note many clinical studies into cannabis as a Parkinson’s treatment have been hampered by regulatory restrictions or have had various shortcomings.

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    Amy Hansen

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  • Research volunteers combat Parkinson’s.

    Research volunteers combat Parkinson’s.

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    Newswise — About three years before he retired, David Campbell noticed something weird happening as he typed. Whenever he tried to hit a letter, say “a,” he’d get “aaa,” like the keyboard was jamming or his finger was triple-tapping the key. That wasn’t the only thing that seemed off—his sense of smell was faltering. “Little things,” he says, “that I didn’t think of as being a big deal.”

    A couple of weeks after he retired in fall 2020, Campbell learned the little things weren’t so little—they were life-changing. He was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. The repeated “a” was caused by a slight tremor as nerve cells in his brain degenerated or died, interrupting the signals controlling his muscles. A tremor is many patients’ first Parkinson’s symptom, followed by a raft of other steadily worsening neurological issues, such as a quieter voice, slower movement, stiffer limbs, and tighter facial expressions. Almost all patients will suffer some loss of smell too.

    Although therapy and medications can bring some relief from the neurodegenerative disorder, there’s no cure. Somewhere between 500,000 and 1 million Americans have Parkinson’s, including actor Michael J. Fox, singer Neil Diamond, and civil rights activist Jesse Jackson.

    For Campbell, it was a pretty shabby retirement gift. As he tried to adjust to his new reality, the former Boston University laboratory engineer joined a support group and decided to volunteer for research studies that aimed to improve treatment—perhaps even plot the route to a cure. “I figured, I have the disease,” he says, “I might as well try to do something good with it.”

    That decision is already having an impact. With the help of volunteers like Campbell, researchers at Boston University’s Center for Neurorehabilitation, a hub for Parkinson’s research, education, and clinical care, have made two important advances that may help people with the disease walk more smoothly, even turn their shuffled steps into confident strides. In one study, they used wearable soft robotic apparel—a series of fabric wraps, cables, actuators, and sensors—to help patients walk farther and faster. A second study used a music-based technology to increase walking duration and distance—controlling a song’s beats per minute to keep the steps up.

    Based at BU Sargent College of Health & Rehabilitation Sciences, the center has been at the forefront of research establishing the benefits of exercise and physical therapy in taming Parkinson’s disease’s impact and improving quality of life. And both of the newly tested therapies could find their way into patients’ everyday lives relatively quickly. The robotic device uses technology that’s already commercially available; the musical intervention uses store-bought headphones. But, says Terry Ellis, the Center for Neurorehabilitation’s director, without the volunteers who give up hours of their time to participate in research studies or help her team test ideas and tweak gadgets, none of it would be possible.

    That’s a story told across BU. Volunteers join research studies—as well as classroom discussions and clinical training programs—on a wide range of topics, participating in person or from home. Some even do it over decades, like those who’ve given their time to the long-running Framingham Heart Study and BU’s Black Women’s Health Study.

    “Most of our research is intervention studies, so there’s hypothetically some benefit for them,” says Ellis of her center’s work. Their fitness may improve, they may get to try out some symptom-relieving tools. “But without them, we couldn’t do the work. I’m always saying to [volunteers], the work wouldn’t exist without your participation and contribution.”

    Robotic Apparel Eliminates Freezing of Gait

    Being a research study guinea pig can be rewarding, and might even save or improve lives, but it’s hardly glamorous work. For most of the apparel study, the main volunteer (unnamed in the final paper to protect their privacy) spent his time walking back and forth—again, and again, and again. At first, it was to get a baseline of his walking ability, then to allow the researchers to monitor the robotic tech’s effectiveness at shifting his stride and fine-tune the technology.

    The patient, a 73-year-old male who’d been diagnosed with Parkinson’s 10 years earlier, was struggling with a common Parkinson’s problem known as freezing of gait. During a freezing episode, thought to be caused by a malfunction in the brain’s locomotor circuitry, a patient’s stride shortens, their walking speed tumbles, and their muscle coordination falls out of whack. Then they just stop—it reportedly feels like their feet are glued to the floor. Things had gotten so bad for the patient working with Ellis—more than 10 freezing episodes a day, resulting in multiple falls—he’d taken to getting around on a kick scooter.

    “It’s just devastating,” says Ellis (CAMED’05), a Sargent professor and chair of physical therapy. “There’s really no medicine or surgery that improves this. It interferes tremendously with people’s everyday life.”

    She and her colleagues had tried wearable robotic apparel with people recovering from a stroke—finding it helped some regain their pre-stroke walking speeds—and wondered if similar technology might work for Parkinson’s too. That exosuit, which is now commercially available for stroke rehabilitation from medical device company ReWalk Robotics, was derived from a model developed for the military by Harvard University’s Biodesign Lab to increase service members’ endurance.

    In most iterations, the robotic apparel looks like a highly engineered sports brace, using an algorithm to drive motors and cables that strategically apply forces to supplement muscles and joints. The version the researchers tailored for the Parkinson’s study featured two bands: one around the waist, the other around the thigh, each connected by a spooled cable. When activated, the spool turns, retracting the cable and pulling the thigh up. Ellis calls it a mechanical assist: “It provides a little bit of force—it’s perceptible, but at a very low level.” The algorithm helps time the assistance to the users’ steps and tailor the amount of force needed.

    As the study progressed, the researchers put their volunteer through his paces with a range of different tasks, including timed walking tests in the lab and outside in the community, adjusting the force provided by the suit—and its timing—and assessing the biomechanics of his walking.

    The results were striking: when the suit was on, the volunteer strolled easily down the corridor, arms and legs swinging with a natural confidence; when it was powered down, the change was almost instant—he staggered, stumbled, shuffled, and grabbed at the wall for balance.

    When switched on, the robotic apparel eliminated his freezing of gait—the first time any study has shown a potential way to overcome the debilitating symptom. The findings were published in Nature Medicine.

    “It’s pretty amazing,” says Ellis, who collaborated with researchers from BU and Harvard University. “We think we’re driving an increase in step length and that’s preventing the shortening of the steps that leads to freezing. In future, we envision you could wear this like underclothes.” Her coauthors include Conor Walsh, a Harvard University professor of engineering and applied sciences; Franchino Porciuncula, a Sargent research scientist; and Jinsoo Kim, a Stanford University postdoctoral scholar and recent Harvard PhD student.

    The researchers even did an informal test outside the study, letting the volunteer take the apparel for a spin at home. “And he did pretty well,” says Ellis. “There were certain tight spots where it didn’t work as well as we would want, so we talked about playing with the algorithm to make it work better.”

    This was just a small study with one patient, so the next stage would be scaling the project up with more volunteers. But Ellis says because the base technology is already commercially available through ReWalk, there aren’t many barriers to getting the suit into clinics. She pictures a near future where a patient visits a physical therapist, their walking is assessed, and they get robotic apparel tailored for their needs. Even without the tech, the team’s findings on the biomechanics of freezing gait may help therapists better target treatments to combat it.

    Walking to the Beat Improves Quality of Life with Parkinson’s

    Another volunteer being helped to hit her stride is Ann Greehy. A former school guidance counselor, she was diagnosed with Parkinson’s in 2015 and began volunteering at BU three years later. Her most recent contribution was as a volunteer on a project examining the use of music as a walking aid.

    In a new study published in the Journal of Parkinson’s Disease, Ellis and Porciuncula found they could use a song’s beats per minute to help people increase their gait speed and stride length, and cut out variability in their walking patterns. Greehy was one of those who’d helped them assess the technology.

    During the study, researchers placed sensors in subjects’ shoes to monitor their gait and gave them an Android device loaded with a music software app. The proprietary system, which uses a technique known as rhythmic auditory stimulation, plays music with beats per minute tailored to a patients’ natural walking cadence, helping them gradually increase their pace session by session; all the participants were asked to plug in their headphones and walk for 30 minutes, five days a week.

    “It was amazing when the beats started—it was a whole new experience,” says Greehy. “You put your shoulders back and you’re up walking.”

    After four weeks of using the system, which was developed by neurorehab company MedRhythms, the 23 study participants had a similar experience to Greehy. The researchers found that, compared to baseline, they had higher rates of daily moderate intensity walking (up by an average of 21.44 minutes) and more steps (up by 3,384 steps). In the paper, they noted “quality of life, disease severity, walking endurance, and functional mobility were improved after four weeks.”

    “People with Parkinson’s can’t move automatically—they have to think about the movement,” says Ellis, who collaborated on the study with researchers from the University of New England, Johns Hopkins University, and MedRhythms. The part of the brain, the basal ganglia, that sends the signals that help people walk without deliberate thought is dysfunctional. “You can’t possibly keep that level of attention to the task of walking, so we were trying to figure out how to provide an external signal if the internal signal is not working.”

    The music provided that signal—in the same way your workout playlist gets your feet moving on the gym treadmill. “You’re not thinking, ‘Oh, I want to run to the beat of the music,’” says Ellis. “It just happens, and so it takes a lot less cognitive energy.”

    Making Sense of Life with Parkinson’s

    One of Greehy’s highlights of the music study was making Ellis’ students laugh by sharing her favorite track: rapper Flo Rida’s “Club Can’t Handle Me.” They were “on the floor laughing at this old lady who likes Flo Rida,” she says. Like Greehy, many of the volunteers also come into BU to work with students, sitting in on classes and panels, talking to them about living with Parkinson’s disease, answering their questions, and giving them a chance to practice their care skills. Some volunteers also attend the Center for Neurorehabilitation as a patient, receiving physical therapy services.

    “Our research and clinic are one and the same,” says Ellis. “That chasm that can exist between research and clinical practice doesn’t exist here. The questions we try to answer with research come from our interactions with patients in the clinic—it’s their challenges and problems that they bring to us that make us curious about how to solve them.” And when they find a solution, they take it straight into the clinic.

    Another of the music study volunteers and clinic patients, retired psychologist Ed Hattauer, appreciates that focus on making lives better—including his own. “As an old-time PhD researcher, I really relish in the importance of doing research, but research that’s very practically oriented toward helping people do things.” Hattauer says that when he comes to the center, there’s “really a sense of personal caring that gets communicated. And I think what I carry away is a sense of hope. It helps sustain my hope and my feeling of emotional connection.”

    Greehy says there are a whole bunch of factors that keep her coming back: “I’ve gotten so much out of this it’s not even funny.” She loves working with students, she gets great tips from the therapists about maintaining her hobbies, like gardening, and she feels good being part of the push for a solution to the disease. Most importantly, volunteering has helped her make sense of life after her diagnosis.

    “What are you going to do with this disease?” says Greehy. “Are you just going to sit back or are we going to jump in? I want us to do more to wipe this thing out. I think it’s time.”

    Like other volunteers, Greehy knows the disease probably won’t be cured in her lifetime, but it won’t stop her trying.

    “I don’t know if they’ll find a cure for me necessarily,” says Campbell, “but I’ve been around research and development my whole life and it feels good to contribute in whatever way possible. I could just sit at home and wallow in pity and do nothing, but it feels proactive to go out and make an effort to advance the science.”

     

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  • Flexible Nanoelectrodes Stimulate Brain with Precision

    Flexible Nanoelectrodes Stimulate Brain with Precision

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    Newswise — Traditional implantable medical devices intended for brain stimulation frequently possess a rigidity and bulkiness that is incongruous with one of the human body’s most supple and fragile tissues.

    In response to this issue, engineers at Rice University have created nanoelectrodes that are minimally invasive and exceptionally flexible. These nanoelectrodes have the potential to function as an implanted platform, enabling long-term, high-resolution stimulation therapy.

    As reported in Cell Reports, a study revealed that these minute implantable devices established stable and enduring tissue-electrode interfaces in rodents with minimal scarring or deterioration. The devices were capable of delivering electrical pulses that closely resembled neuronal signaling patterns and amplitudes, surpassing the capabilities of traditional intracortical electrodes.

    Due to their exceptional biocompatibility and precise spatiotemporal stimulus control, these devices have the potential to facilitate the advancement of novel brain stimulation therapies. These therapies, such as neuronal prostheses, could greatly benefit individuals with impaired sensory or motor functions.

    Lan Luan, a corresponding author on the study and an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering, explained that the research paper utilizes imaging, behavioral, and histological methods to demonstrate the enhanced effectiveness of stimulation achieved by these tissue-integrated electrodes. The electrodes have the capability to administer precise and minute electrical pulses, thereby facilitating controlled neural activity excitation.

    The team of researchers successfully achieved a significant reduction in the required current for neuronal activation, surpassing an order of magnitude. This means that the electrical pulses delivered by the electrodes can be as subtle as a duration of a couple hundred microseconds and an amplitude of one or two microamps. Such precise and low-intensity stimulation holds great potential for advancing the field of brain stimulation therapies.

    The recently developed electrode design by the researchers at the Rice Neuroengineering Initiative marks a substantial advancement compared to traditional implantable electrodes utilized for treating conditions like Parkinson’s disease, epilepsy, and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Conventional electrodes often lead to adverse tissue reactions and unintended alterations in neural activity. The new electrode design aims to address these challenges and offers a promising solution for enhancing the effectiveness and safety of treatments for such neurological conditions.

    Chong Xie, a corresponding author of the study and an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering, stated that traditional electrodes are highly invasive in nature. These electrodes typically activate thousands or even millions of neurons simultaneously.

    “When all these neurons are stimulated simultaneously, their individual functions and coordination, which are supposed to follow specific patterns, get disrupted,” explained Chong Xie. “While this simultaneous stimulation may have the desired therapeutic effect in certain cases, it lacks the necessary precision and control, especially when it comes to encoding sensory information. To achieve more precise and effective outcomes, greater control over the stimuli is essential.”

    Xie drew a comparison between the stimulation provided by traditional electrodes and the disruptive impact of “blowing an airhorn in everyone’s ear or having a loudspeaker blaring” in a room filled with people. This analogy emphasizes the lack of specificity and precision in conventional electrode stimulation, which can lead to a generalized and disruptive effect on neural activity.

    “We used to have this very big loudspeaker, and now everyone has an earpiece,” he said.

    Xie drew a comparison between the stimulation provided by traditional electrodes and the disruptive impact of “blowing an airhorn in everyone’s ear or having a loudspeaker blaring” in a room filled with people. This analogy emphasizes the lack of specificity and precision in conventional electrode stimulation, which can lead to a generalized and disruptive effect on neural activity.

    The capacity to modify the frequency, duration, and intensity of the signals holds the potential for the advancement of innovative sensory prosthetic devices.

    Luan stated, “When a larger current is employed, neuron activation becomes more widespread and diffuse. However, we successfully reduced the current and demonstrated a significantly more focused activation. This achievement can pave the way for the development of higher-resolution stimulation devices.”

    Both Luan and Xie are integral members of the Rice Neuroengineering Initiative, and their respective laboratories are engaged in a collaborative effort to develop an implantable visual prosthetic device aimed at assisting visually impaired patients.

    Luan envisions a future where electrode arrays can be implanted to restore impaired sensory function. He highlights that the precision and specificity of neuron activation play a crucial role in generating accurate and precise sensations. Luan emphasizes that the more focused and deliberate the activation of neurons, the higher the level of precision in the generated sensation.

    Luan, who will be assuming the position of associate professor starting from July 1, expressed the significance of their electrode’s ultraflexible design in achieving enhanced tissue integration. They have published a series of research papers demonstrating the electrode’s capability to facilitate improved recording of brain activity over extended periods, yielding superior signal-to-noise ratios.

    The study has been led by Roy Lycke, a postdoctoral associate in electrical and computer engineering, and Robin Kim, a graduate student. Both Lycke and Kim have played crucial roles as lead authors in conducting the research.

    The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (R01NS109361, U01 NS115588) and Rice internal funds supported the research.

    -30-

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  • Michael J. Fox says he’s suffered numerous injuries as a result of his Parkinson’s

    Michael J. Fox says he’s suffered numerous injuries as a result of his Parkinson’s

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    Michael J. Fox has suffered from a number of injuries as a result of his Parkinson’s disease, which he was diagnosed with in 1991 at age 29, the actor revealed in an interview with Variety this week.

    The 61-year-old “Back to the Future” star opened up about his battle with the disease, explaining the injuries he has gotten from losing his balance. 

    The neurological disorder causes unintended stiffness, shakiness and difficulty with coordination, and worsens over time, according to the National Institutes of Health.

    “I broke this shoulder — had it replaced. I broke this elbow. I broke this hand. I had an infection that almost cost me this finger. I broke my face. I broke this humerus,” Fox told Variety.

    Fox said it has been difficult to manage his illness over the years, during which he has suffered through other personal losses and mental health struggles, in addition to already managing his Parkinson’s symptoms. 

    “I have aides around me quite a bit of the time in case I fall, and that lack of privacy is hard to deal with,” he said in the interview. “I lost family members, I lost my dog, I lost freedom, I lost health. I hesitate to use the term ‘depression,’ because I’m not qualified to diagnose myself, but all the signs were there.”

    While it hasn’t been easy, the “Family Ties” star said he has found comfort in the support of his family, who have been helping him to get through his health issues.

    “I just enjoy the little math problems of existence,” the actor said. “I love waking up and figuring that stuff out and at the same time being with my family.”

    And, he’s come to a point where he accepts the impacts the debilitating disease may have on his body.

    “My problem is I fall down. I trip over things and fall down and break things. And that’s part of having this,” Fox said. “But I hope that, and I feel that, I won’t break as many bones tomorrow. So that’s being optimistic.”

    Since going public about his illness in 1998, Fox has worked hard to raise money for Parkinson’s, a disease he learned was underfunded for research and treatment development. The nonprofit Michael J. Fox Foundation, which was founded in 2000, has raised more than $1.5 billion for Parkinson’s research, according to its website.

    Parkinson’s disease affects about 500,000 Americans, according to the National Institutes of Health, but some experts estimate that as many as one million Americans may have the disease, as it often goes undiagnosed.

    Fox retired from acting in 2020 due to struggles with learning lines and acting as a result of the disease, but he is soon appearing in a new documentary about his life, “Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie,” which details his successful career, his journey with sobriety, his battle with Parkinson’s, and his determined spirit to continue living on his own terms despite the disease’s immobilizing symptoms.

    “No matter how much I sit here and talk to you about how I’ve philosophically accepted it and taken its weight, Parkinson’s is still kicking my ass. I won’t win at this. I will lose,” Fox told the magazine. “But, there’s plenty to be gained in the loss.”

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  • Music Therapy: Relief for Chronic Pain Sufferers

    Music Therapy: Relief for Chronic Pain Sufferers

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    Newswise — In Sörmland, Sweden, music therapy is offered as a method of treatment for people living with chronic pain. Currently, the effects of what is known as the FMT method are being investigated through a research project at Mälardalen University (MDU).

    In the FMT method, (Functionally oriented Music Therapy), music experiences and movement are combined with the purpose of contributing to a person’s well-being and recuperation. During the treatment, a therapist assesses what basic functions the participant needs to develop, and with the help of musical instruments such as drums and cymbals in various formations, different movements in the body are stimulated. Today, the treatment is given through a healthcare agreement in Sörmland.

    In a current research project which has been launched at MDU, researchers wish to investigate whether it is possible to find scientific evidence that the FMT method is effective in increasing well-being, improving quality of life, and if and in what way it can relieve suffering and pain in people who live with chronic pain.

    “I believe it is essential to evaluate health-promoting alternative methods in the area of chronic pain, as many people in society suffer from this. This project aims to explore and evaluate an up until now unexplored treatment method for people living with long standing pain,” says Helena Lööf, Associate Professor and Senior Lecturer in Health Sciences at MDU.

    The method contributed to recovery
    The backdrop to the project is a pilot study which showed that the FMT method helped people affected by stroke and Parkinson’s disease to recover better.

    “Pain is the most common reason for seeking primary care services. Therefore in this way, many people are affected and from a societal standpoint it is good to have a variety of support efforts. This is in line with person-centred healthcare.”

    Scientific evaluation needed
    “Through a care agreement with a FMT treatment centre in Eskilstuna, this method is already being used in primary care in Sörmland. But the method is not evidence-based, which is why a scientific evaluation is needed. We will evaluate the effects of FMT in people suffering from chronic pain in comparison with the standard care that is provided in local healthcare. We also wish to create a deeper understanding of the importance of music and movement in recovery.”

    Today, FMT is used in habilitation, rehabilitation and psychiatric healthcare.

    “If the results of the project are positive, that is, if evidence can be found that various aspects of health are affected or improved, these can be used as evidence-based support for health promotion purposes for people suffering with chronic pain.”

    “And on the other hand, if the results show that FMT has no or only a minor effect, this is in itself an important contribution to new knowledge about treatment and recovery for these people. Our research team is looking forward to investigating this over the next few years,” says Helena Lööf.

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  • Michael J. Fox opens up about Parkinson’s progression: ‘I won’t be 80’ – National | Globalnews.ca

    Michael J. Fox opens up about Parkinson’s progression: ‘I won’t be 80’ – National | Globalnews.ca

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    Beloved Canadian actor Michael J. Fox has always been honest about his struggles with young-onset Parkinson’s disease.

    In an interview with CBS Sunday Morning — teasing the upcoming documentary about his life, Still — Fox said the degenerative condition has made aging a challenge. He described Parkinson’s as a “gift that keeps on taking.”

    “It sucks, having Parkinson’s,” Fox, 61, told interviewer Jane Pauley. “It’s getting tougher, it’s getting harder, every day you suffer but that’s the way it is.”

    Fox was diagnosed with Parkinson’s in 1990, the year following the release of Back to the Future Part III. He was 29.

    Parkinson’s is a disorder of the central nervous system that mainly affects one’s motor functions. The condition causes gradual damage to parts of a person’s brain, resulting in a number of symptoms including tremors, slow movement and stiff and inflexible muscles. There is no cure for the condition.

    Story continues below advertisement

    Fox said Parkinson’s has led to several injuries over the years, including breaking bones in his face and other parts of his body, and the discovery of a benign tumour on his spine.

    He clarified that people do not die directly of Parkinson’s disease — but Fox wasn’t naive to his own mortality either.

    “I’m not going to be 80. I won’t be 80,” Fox said.

    He claimed that falling, aspirating food and pneumonia can all be seen as a “big killer” for a person with Parkinson’s.

    “I recognize how hard this is for people and recognize how hard it is for me but I have a certain set of skills that allow me to deal with this stuff and I realize, with gratitude, optimism is sustainable,” he explained. “If you can find something to be grateful for, then you find something to look forward to, and you carry on.”

    Story continues below advertisement

    Fox has been a leading voice in advocating for Parkinson’s research since he established his own organization, the Michael J. Fox Foundation, in 2000, two years after he went public with his diagnosis. In April, the organization was pivotal in identifying a biogenetic marker that could help with early diagnosis and treatment.


    Click to play video: 'Understanding the disease on World Parkinson’s Day'


    Understanding the disease on World Parkinson’s Day


    The Michael J. Fox Foundation has raised over US$1.75 billion (C$2.37 billion) to fund Parkinson’s research, according to the organization’s website.

    Fox retired from acting in 2020. In November, he was given an honorary Oscar, the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian award, for his philanthropic efforts in Parkinson’s research. The award is given to an “individual in the motion picture industry whose humanitarian efforts have brought credit to the industry,” according to The Academy’s website.

    Fox will release a new documentary about his life and Parkinson’s diagnosis, called Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie, on Apple TV+ on May 12.

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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  • Preview: Michael J. Fox on Parkinson’s: “Every day it gets tougher”

    Preview: Michael J. Fox on Parkinson’s: “Every day it gets tougher”

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    Preview: Michael J. Fox on Parkinson’s: “Every day it gets tougher” – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    In this preview of an interview to be broadcast on “CBS Sunday Morning” April 30, the actor talks with Jane Pauley about the progression of his Parkinson’s disease.

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  • Preview: Michael J. Fox on Parkinson’s, and optimism

    Preview: Michael J. Fox on Parkinson’s, and optimism

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    Actor Michael J. Fox was diagnosed with early-onset Parkinson’s disease in 1991 when he was just 29. In an interview with “CBS Sunday Morning” anchor Jane Pauley, Fox, now 61, says dealing with the incurable disease is getting more challenging, and he can’t imagine living until he’s 80.

    The revealing and emotional interview will be broadcast on “CBS Sunday Morning” April 30 and streamed on Paramount+.

    In a wide-ranging conversation, Fox talks with Pauley about his life today; the recent breakthrough in research announced by his foundation identifying a genetic biomarker that could lead to earlier diagnosis; and how, with gratitude, optimism is sustainable.

    Below are some excerpts from the interview:
          

    MICHAEL J. FOX: My life is set up so I can pack Parkinson’s along with me if I have to.

    JANE PAULEY: You’ve not squandered any of your capacity. But at some point, Parkinson’s gonna make the call for you, isn’t it?

    FOX: Yeah, it’s, it’s banging on the door. Yeah, I mean, I’m not gonna lie. It’s gettin’ hard, it’s gettin’ harder. It’s gettin’ tougher. Every day it’s tougher. But, but, that’s, that’s the way it is. I mean, you know, who do I see about that? …


    Preview: Michael J. Fox on Parkinson’s: “Every day it gets tougher”

    00:26

    FOX: I had spinal surgery. I had a tumor on my spine. And – and – and it was benign, but it messed up my walking. … And then, started to break stuff. Bro, broke this arm, and I broke this arm, I broke this elbow. I broke my face. I broke my hand.

    PAULEY: Falling on things?

    FOX:  Which is a big killer with Parkinson’s. It’s falling … and aspirating food and getting pneumonia. All these subtle ways that gets ya’. … You don’t die from Parkinson’s. You die with Parkinson’s. So – so I’ve been – I’ve been thinking about the mortality of it. … I’m not gonna be 80. I’m not gonna be 80.

    The Emmy Award-winning “Sunday Morning” is broadcast Sundays on CBS beginning at 9 a.m. ET. “Sunday Morning” also streams on the CBS News app [beginning at 12 p.m. ET] and on Paramount+, and is available on cbs.com and cbsnews.com.

    Be sure to follow us at cbssundaymorning.com, and on TwitterFacebookInstagramYouTube and TikTok.

         
    For more info:

         
    To watch a trailer for “Still” click on the video player below:


    STILL: A Michael J. Fox Movie — Official Trailer | Apple TV+ by
    Apple TV on
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  • East Palestine families living in limbo months after fire

    East Palestine families living in limbo months after fire

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    EAST PALESTINE, Ohio — Jeff Drummond spends days and nights alone in a tiny room with fake wood paneling, two small beds and a microwave atop a mini refrigerator that serves as a nightstand — his pickup truck parked just outside the door at the roadside motel where he’s taken refuge since early February.

    Shelby Walker bounces from hotel to hotel with her five children and four grandchildren while crews tear up railroad tracks and scoop out contaminated soil near their four-bedroom home.

    Almost 3 months after a fiery Norfolk Southern train derailment blackened the skies, sent residents fleeing and thrust East Palestine into a national debate over rail safety, residents say they are still living in limbo. They’re unsure how or whether to move on from the accident and worry what will happen to them and the village where they have deep family roots, friendships and affordable homes.

    “I have no idea how long we can continue to do this,” says Walker, while washing clothes at a laundromat.

    Walker, 48, also works at a small hotel where many workers are staying, so is constantly reminded of the accident. She remembers the scorched rail tanker at her property line and a backyard flooded with water from the burn site. “Sometimes I just break down,” she says.

    About half of East Palestine’s nearly 5,000 residents evacuated when, days after the Feb. 3 derailment, officials decided to burn toxic vinyl chloride from five tanker cars to prevent a catastrophic explosion.

    Most have returned, though many complain about illnesses and worry about soil, water and air quality. Some are staying away until they’re sure it’s safe. Others, like Drummond, are not allowed back in their homes because of the ongoing cleanup.

    The retired truck driver and Gulf War veteran misses mowing the lawn, puttering around his yard and chatting with regulars at the tavern next door.

    “I have nothing here,” says Drummond, sitting on an orange plastic chair outside the Davis Motel in North Lima, Ohio. “So it’s trying to find something to keep yourself busy, to keep from going crazy.”

    FEARING THE UNKNOWN

    Norfolk Southern Railroad is paying for lodging for some families but won’t say how many still are out of their homes while the railroad excavates tens of thousands of tons of contaminated soil, a process the Environmental Protection Agency expects to take another 2-3 months. The railroad also must remove toxic chemicals from two creeks, which could take longer.

    “I pledge that we won’t be finished until we make it right,” Norfolk Southern President and CEO Alan Shaw told an Ohio rail safety committee last week.

    The railroad also handed out $1,000 “inconvenience checks” to residents within the ZIP code that includes East Palestine and surrounding areas, but most did not qualify for further assistance and went home.

    The EPA’s Mark Durno says continual air monitoring at the derailment site and in the community and soil tests in parks, on agricultural land and at other potentially affected areas have not yet detected concerning levels of any contaminants.

    “Nothing jumped off page for us yet,” Durno says, adding that testing would continue just to be sure.

    The railroad says testing shows drinking water is safe, though it’s establishing a fund for long-term drinking water protection. It’s also establishing funds for health care and to help sellers if their property value falls because of the accident.

    But it’s the unknown that worry people.

    Jessica Conard, a 37-year-old speech therapist, wonders whether her boys — ages 3, 8 and 9 — will ever be able to fish in the pond separating their property from the railroad tracks. Or play at the park where the chemicals are being removed from a stream. Can they remain in the town where “generations upon generations” of family have lived?

    “You want them to be able to have those memories,” says Conard, who returned to East Palestine six years ago to raise her family where the sound of trains was the backdrop to her own childhood. “I just kind of feel like those memories are tainted because when you hear a train now it kind of makes you cringe.”

    DEEP ROOTS

    This is the kind of place where everyone seems connected to everyone else, residents say. Parents don’t worry about their kids because they know other parents are looking out for them.

    Summer Magness chokes up recalling how the community held benefit dinners after her eldest daughter, Samantha, suffered multiple cardiac arrests playing softball four years ago, resulting in a brain injury that left her paralyzed and unable to speak. Samantha, now 16, gets all A’s, attends homecoming and still has her circle of friends.

    “We couldn’t have made it without them,” Magness says.

    Eighty-one-year-old Norma Carr raised four children in the cedar-sided 1930s duplex she moved into 57 years ago and where three generations lived together before the derailment. She knew everyone in her neighborhood, walked to church and always felt safe among friends.

    For now, she’s staying in a condominium 10 miles (16 kilometers) away that the railroad rented the family for six months because Carr, who has Parkinson’s, fared poorly during a month in a cramped hotel room.

    “I miss being able to look out the window and not see a stranger,” says Carr, choking back tears.

    Most of Conard’s relatives work in factories and, like many here, live paycheck to paycheck, putting aside money to buy and fix up homes, she says. “I mean, this is what we strive for. It’s the American dream.”

    She and her husband sold their first East Palestine home last year to move into their “forever home” a couple miles away, on a road named for one of her ancestors. “Then all of a sudden, overnight (the dream is) gone.”

    STAY OR GO?

    Small businesses like Sprinklz on Top and The Corner Store line the main drag, North Market Street, along with chains like McDonald’s and Pizza Hut. The Chamber of Commerce, library and post office are there, too. Statues of bulldogs, the high school mascot, are placed throughout town.

    There also are signs reflecting the hardship the village has been through: “Y’all OK?” says one. Others say “Get ready for the greatest comeback in American history.”

    But many wonder if they should stay or go.

    For Summer Magness, it would be difficult to leave the community where her family has lived for generations. She doubts her home could sell for what it would cost to buy elsewhere. Still, she would move if she could, because the feeling of security has been upended and “the safety of my children is my only concern.”

    To stay, Carr’s daughter Kristina Ferguson, 49, says she would want independent testing and a thorough cleaning of their home. But she isn’t sure if the family will ever feel safe there again.

    Ferguson also worries whether living there could affect her mother’s Parkinson’s.

    “There’s … no home in the world that is worth losing one family member over,” she says. “I know as long as we’re together we will have a home in our heart.”

    ___

    Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives support from several private foundations. See more about AP’s climate initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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  • Comedian Richard Lewis reveals he has Parkinson’s disease

    Comedian Richard Lewis reveals he has Parkinson’s disease

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    Comedian Richard Lewis is retiring from stand-up following four surgeries and a diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease

    NEW YORK — Comedian Richard Lewis is retiring from stand-up following four surgeries and a diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease.

    The 75-year-old “Curb Your Enthusiasm” star, who is known for wearing all-black and exploring his neuroses onstage, posted a video Monday to Twitter explaining his various health issues.

    “For the last three-and-a-half years, I’ve had sort of a rocky time,” he said, adding that he has suffered with back pain, and he had shoulder and hip replacement surgeries.

    He also got a brain scan because he was shuffling his feet when he walked. Doctors diagnosed him with Parkinson’s. “Luckily, I got it late in life, and they say you progress very slowly if at all, and I’m on the right meds, so I’m cool,” he said. ”I’m finished with stand-up. I’m just focusing on writing and acting.”

    Lewis’ big screen credits include “Robin Hood: Men in Tights,” “Leaving Las Vegas” and “Vamps” and TV appearances on everything from “7th Heaven” to “George Lopez” and “BoJack Horseman” to “Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist.”

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  • ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm’ Star Richard Lewis Opens Up About Parkinson’s Disease Diagnosis

    ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm’ Star Richard Lewis Opens Up About Parkinson’s Disease Diagnosis

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    By Becca Longmire.

    “Curb Your Enthusiasm” star Richard Lewis is opening up about his Parkinson’s disease diagnosis.

    The actor, 75, shared a video on Twitter to tell fans what had been going on for the last few and a half years.

    He told the camera, “Hey listen, I just wrapped a couple of weeks ago season 12 of ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm’ and it was just an amazing season and I’m so grateful to be a part of that show.

    “But you know the last three and a half years, I’ve had sort of a rocky time and people said, ‘I haven’t heard from you, are you still touring?’”


    READ MORE:
    ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm’ Season 12 Likely To Be The Show’s Last

    “Here’s really what happened,” Lewis went on. “Three and half years ago I was in the middle of a tour and I finally ended it with a show. I said, ‘You know I’m at the top of my game, after 15 years almost I’m going to call it quits,’ and I felt great about that and then out of the blue the s**t hit the fan. I had four surgeries back to back to back to back, it was incredible, I couldn’t believe it, it was bad luck, but it’s life.”

    He explained how he’d had back surgery, shoulder and shoulder replacement surgery and hip replacement surgery.

    Lewis, who tied the knot with Joyce Lapinsky in 2005, said he was then diagnosed with Parkinson’s about two years ago after noticing he was walking “stiffly” and shuffling his feet.


    READ MORE:
    ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm’ Filmed A Larry David Death Scene In Case Show Was Cancelled After Season 11

    He assured fans, “But luckily I got it late in life and they say you progress very slowly if at all and I’m on the right meds so I’m cool.”

    Lewis continued, “I just wanted to let you know that’s where it’s been at.

    “I’m finished with stand-up. I’m just focusing on writing and acting. I have Parkinson’s disease but I’m under a doctor’s care and everything is cool. I love my wife, I love my little puppy dog and I love all my friends and my fans. And now you know where it’s been at the last three and a half years. God bless you.”

    Click to View Gallery

    Star Spotting: RHOBH Support Homeless Not Toothless Hollywood Gala




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    Becca Longmire

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  • Neil Diamond on “A Beautiful Noise,” Parkinson’s, and being thankful

    Neil Diamond on “A Beautiful Noise,” Parkinson’s, and being thankful

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    The new Broadway show, “A Beautiful Noise,” is the story of a singer who’s sold more than 130 million records. Its subject: Neil Diamond, who said that attending the opening was “kind of like a dream come true. It was absolutely wonderful.”

    With his wife, Katie, by his side, the 82-year-old Diamond, who’s rarely performed since he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, led the crowd in a chorus of “Sweet Caroline.”

    There was, he said, a lot of love in the theatre, “and I felt it.”

    sweet-caroline.jpg
    Neil Diamond leads the audience at the Broadhurst Theatre in New York City in singing “Sweet Caroline.”

    CBS News


    Mason asked, “Were you ever getting flashbacks in the middle of the show?”

    “I think constantly, from the minute it started! Like, everything was a flashback!”

    He said he’d wanted to make a musical (he thinks all songwriters and performers have that desire), but as the show was being developed, Diamond told the producers and writers he wanted it “warts and all.” “I didn’t necessarily love it, warts and all, but I wanted it,” he said.

    Will Swenson plays the young Neil Diamond, whose Olympian ambition undoes two marriages. Mark Jacoby plays the older Diamond, still haunted by self-doubt. Diamond said. “This show was part of my psychotherapy. And it hurt. I didn’t like looking at myself in many of the scenes.”

    will-swenson-mark-jacoby-a-beautiful-noise.jpg
    Will Swenson and Mark Jacoby as Neil Diamond in “A Beautiful Noise.”

    “A Beautiful Noise”


    What part was hardest? “It all was pretty hard. I was a little embarrassed, I was flattered, and I was scared.”

    Mason asked, “What were you scared of?”

    “Being found out is the scariest thing you can hope, because we all have a façade, and the truth be known to all of ’em, I’m not some big star; I’m just me.”

    Just a Jewish kid from Brooklyn who wanted to be a songwriter.

    neil-diamond-the-bitter-end-2005.jpg
    Neil Diamond, returning to the Bitter End in 2005.

    CBS News


    In 2005, Diamond took “Sunday Morning” back to the Bitter End, the Greenwich Village club where the singer got his start. 

    He asked, “Can I step up on the stage and see what it feels like to be 25 again?

    “It was my beginning,” he said. “It was right here.”

    In the 1960s Diamond climbed the charts with hits like “Cherry, Cherry,” “Thank the Lord for the Night Time,” “Holly Holy,” and “Sweet Caroline.”


    Sweet Caroline by
    Neil Diamond – Topic on
    YouTube

    In the Seventies, with “Cracklin’ Rose,” “Song Sung Blue,” and “You Don’t Bring Me Flowers,” he conquered the world. By the Eighties, he was one its biggest concert draws. In the ’90s, no one sold more tickets than the “Jewish Elvis.”

    When Diamond and Mason met once more in 2014 for “CBS This Morning,” the singer was about to go on the road again – and he implied it wasn’t by choice. “I have to, yeah. I don’t want to,” he said.

    “So, where does the ‘have to’ come from?” Mason asked.

    “I have to because if I want to maintain any self … ” He paused. “I don’t know why I have to.”

    But in January 2018, Diamond revealed he’d been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, a neurological disorder that abruptly ended his touring career.

    Diamond still regularly visits his Archangel Studio in Los Angeles, where the halls are decked with decades’ worth of awards, and where – for the first time since that diagnosis – he talked about facing Parkinson’s.

    Mason asked, “How hard has it been for you to give up [touring]?”

    “Oh, I still haven’t given it up, yet. It’s very hard,” he replied. “In a sense, I was in denial for the first year or two. When the doctor told me what it was, I was just not ready to accept it. I said, ‘Oh, okay. I’ll see you, you know, whenever you wanna see me. But I have work to do, so I’ll see you later.’”

    anthony-mason-neil-diamond.jpg
    Correspondent Anthony Mason with singer-songwriter Neil Diamond. 

    CBS News


    His acceptance, he admits, is a work in progress. “I’m still doing it. And I don’t like it,” he said. “Okay, so this is the hand that God’s given me, and I have to make the best of it, and so I am.”

    Mason asked, “Was there a moment in that process where you finally sort of did say to yourself, I accept this?”

    “I think this has just been in the last few weeks.”

    “Really?”

    neil-diamond-interview-b-1280.jpg
    Singer-songwriter Neil Diamond.

    CBS News


    “But somehow a calm has moved [into] the hurricane of my life, and things have gotten very quiet, as quiet as this recording studio,” said Diamond. “And I like it. I find that I like myself better. I’m easier on people, I’m easier on myself. And the beat goes on, and it will go on long after I’m gone.

    “I still can sing,” he said.

    “Do you need to still sing?”

    “Well, I like singing. I’ve been doing it for 50 years, and I enjoy it.”

    “What happens inside you when you sing?”

    “I feel good. It’s like, all the systems in my mind and my body are working as one when I’m singing. And it’s a great feeling.”

    “[It’s] given you a pretty amazing life.”

    “I’ve had a pretty amazing life, it’s true,” Diamond said. “And the thing was, I wasn’t always able to look back on it and be comfortable with it, smile, feel that I was worth it. I think all of that good stuff is starting to come into my life.”

    Why? “Well, I can’t really fight this thing, so I had to accept it, this Parkinson’s Disease. There’s no cure. There’s no getting away from it. You can’t just say, ‘Okay, enough already. Let’s get back to life.’ It doesn’t work like that. But I’ve come to accept what limitations I have, and still have great days.”

    Great days, like an opening night on Broadway.

    a-beautiful-noise.jpg
    A scene from the Broadway musical “A Beautiful Noise.”

    “A Beautiful Noise”


    He said, “I just have to take life as it comes to me, enjoy it, be thankful that I’ve had it, especially having the life that I’ve had.”

    For Neil Diamond, it’s a life worthy of a Broadway musical.

    Mason asked, “What does it mean to you?”

    “Well, to paraphrase Sally Field, ‘They like me! They really like me!’” he laughed.

    To listen to the Original Broadway Cast Album of “A Beautiful Noise” click on the audio player below:


    Album – A Beautiful Noise, The Neil Diamond Musical (Original Broadway Cast Recording) by
    on
    YouTube

          
    For more info:

           
    Story produced by Jon Carras. Editor: Carol Ross. 

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